Followers

Privacy Policy

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

I haven't seen very many Hoot Gibson movies, but I've enjoyed all the ones I've watched. The jovial, almost pudgy Gibson, with a goofy grin on his face and his six-gun tucked behind his belt or shoved into a hip pocket instead of riding in a tied-down holster, isn't your typical B-Western hero. And his movies tend to be on the lightweight side. But they're fun.In CLEARING THE RANGE, he plays Curt Fremont, a drifting cowboy who comes back to his hometown to find that his banker brother has been murdered. Friends of the family, including a crusty old rancher and his beautiful daughter, suspect that the bank's cashier, who has taken over running things, is the killer. But Curt shows no interest in finding out who murdered his brother, which leads people, including the rancher's beautiful daughter, to consider him a coward.Ah, but is it a coincidence that a dashing, mysterious Mexican bandit known as El Capitan shows up about the same time and starts wreaking havoc with the crooked cashier's plans? I think not! Luckily, the screenwriters don't even attempt to make a mystery out of this, as it's obvious all along that Gibson's character is just pretending to be a coward and is also the dashing El Capitan.Gibson's sheer likability carries this movie, along with the fact that he's a surprisingly athletic hero and handles some of the rough-and-tumble stuff himself. Nobody's going to mistake CLEARING THE RANGE for a lost classic, but it is a pleasant way to spend an hour if you're a B-Western fan.

Sunday, February 25, 2018

What a great cover by Walter Baumhofer on this issue of DIME DETECTIVE. Inside are stories by some of the top pulpsters: T.T. Flynn, Hugh B. Cave, Cornell Woolrich, John K. Butler, and Edward Parrish Ware. DIME DETECTIVE deserves its reputation as one of the very best pulps.

Saturday, February 24, 2018

This is a pulp that I own and read recently. That’s my
copy in the picture, although it’s a photo and not a scan this time.

I’m a long, long time fan of Texas
Ranger Jim Hatfield, having first encountered the character approximately 50
years ago when I read a Popular Library paperback reprint of one of the novels
that originally appeared in the pulp TEXAS RANGERS. I was in high school at the
time, and I remember sitting in the old army barracks building my school used
as a study hall and flipping the pages, absolutely enthralled by the yarn. (I
seldom if ever actually studied in
study hall, preferring to use that time to read paperbacks or library books,
but as I’ve mentioned before, I really was studying for my future career, wasn’t
I?) The book was titled GUNFIGHTER’S RETURN, but that was actually a retitling
from the pulp, and I no longer recall what the original title was. At the time,
I’d never heard of TEXAS RANGERS, didn’t know that the author listed on the
cover, Jackson Cole, didn’t really exist but was actually a house-name, and had
no idea that the real author was Tom Curry. But I learned all that later.

All that long-winded reminiscing leads up to the fact that Tom Curry is also
the author of the Hatfield novel in this issue, “Rustlers of Black Range”.
Curry wrote 55 of the Jim Hatfield novels, tied with series creator A. Leslie
Scott for the most. (Actually, Scott later wrote a few paperback original
novels featuring Hatfield, so technically, he wrote the most overall . . .)
Curry’s entries are pretty easy to spot. He usually spends some time at the
first of the novel setting up the situation and introducing a secondary hero
before Hatfield ever appears, and his stories often have some sort of
historical angle, too. That’s the case here, as “Rustlers of Black Range” centers
around the Alsatian, Swiss, and German immigrants who settled in central Texas.
It’s specifically set in and around the real town of Castroville, west of San
Antonio in the rangeland between the Hill Country to the north and the thick
chapparal to the south. The villain is a German baron who’s trying to take over
the ranches in the area for some unknown reason. He has a gang of rustlers
working for him, trying to drive the honest cattlemen out of business. The
secondary hero is wandering cowpoke Aje Pickett, who first falls in with the
rustlers, then goes over to the side of the good guys once he realizes what’s
going on. The victimized settlers have written to Austin asking for help from
the Rangers, and that’s where Jim Hatfield comes in.

For a stretch during the Forties, Curry introduced a couple of supporting
characters in a number of his stories, pretty schoolteacher Anita Robertson and
her teenage brother Buck. Anita, of course, was a low-key love interest for
Hatfield, who’s much too devoted to his job to indulge in much actual romancin’,
and Buck was Hatfield’s sidekick, helping him out with his assignments. I’ll be
blunt: I never liked Anita and Buck. I mean, Hatfield is known far and wide as
the Lone Wolf. Why saddle him with a kid sidekick? (It’s even worse in the
Fifties, when author Roe Richmond introduces a whole gaggle of irritating
sidekicks for the so-called Lone Wolf.) But I have to say, Buck isn’t too
annoying in this novel and actually serves a purpose in the plot, and Anita
barely appears, so there’s not too much of that sappy mush to steal pages from
ridin’ and fightin’ and shootin’, which of course is what we’re there for.

Anyway, Hatfield, Buck, Aje Pickett, and the good guy settlers put the kibosh
on the evil baron’s plans (did I mention that the evil baron has a pair of
wolfhounds?) and the motivation behind the whole scheme won’t come as any
surprise, making this a fairly undistinguished but still enjoyable yarn. And I
really liked using the European immigrants and their transplanted culture as
part of the setting and plot. That’s a little unusual. I mean, how many Western
novels have you read where there’s a chapter entitled “Guns at the Biergarten”?

There are three short stories backing up the Hatfield novel in this issue. The
first, “Long Sam’s Hangnoose Swap”, is part of a long-running series by Lee
Bond about heroic outlaw Long Sam Littlejohn, who is always pursued by deputy
U.S. marshal Joe Fry. The first Long Sam story appeared in the very first issue
of TEXAS RANGERS in 1936, and the series continued to appear in almost every
issue until 1952. The stories are very formulaic but still great fun if they’re
spaced out. Bond was a good writer. In this one, Long Sam and Joe Fry are
forced to team up (as they often are) in order to battle against a gang of
vicious Comancheros. It’s an entertaining yarn.

“Louisiana Lobo” is by Clark Gray, a Western pulpster who was reasonably
prolific for a time in the Forties and Fifties and who wrote a couple of Jim
Hatfield novels as Jackson Cole. I read one of those Hatfield novels a long
time ago in the paperback reprint (LOBO COLONEL) and recall not liking it much.
That being said, this story is a pretty good hardboiled Western yarn about a
Cajun ex-Confederate sergeant who travels to Texas after the war to help his
old commanding officer start a ranch, but instead he winds up in the middle of
a deadly hunt for a fortune in gold. I enjoyed this one enough that I may have
to dig out the issue of TEXAS RANGERS containing Gray’s other Jim Hatfield
novel, “Warpath”, and give it a try.

Clee Woods wrote hundreds of stories for a lot of different Western pulps, but
his work appeared regularly in RANCH ROMANCES for almost three decades, from
the mid-Twenties to the mid-Fifties. “Nurse’s Big Call”, his story in this
issue of TEXAS RANGERS, could have just easily appeared in RANCH ROMANCES,
since it’s a modern-day Western about a love triangle involving a nurse, the
doctor she works for, and a young rancher. There’s a little action, a decent
fistfight, but overall there’s not much to this one and it’s easily the weakest
story in the issue.

So overall, this is a fairly average issue of TEXAS RANGERS, with a solidly
entertaining, slightly unusual, but not top rank Hatfield novel by Tom Curry,
and two out of three pretty good short stories. Not an issue to give somebody
who’s never read an issue before, but if you’re already a TEXAS RANGERS fan, it’s
well worth reading.

Friday, February 23, 2018

Over the years I’ve found Ed Lacy (real name Leonard
Zinberg) to be a pretty dependable hardboiled/noir author. Some of his books I
like less than others because he lets too much of his politics seep
into them, but most of them are good, tough, fast-paced yarns about characters
who aren’t necessarily sympathetic, but by golly, the reader winds up rooting
for them anyway.

That’s certainly the case in THE MEN FROM THE BOYS, a novel published in
hardcover by Dutton in 1956, reprinted by Pocket Books in 1957, and soon to be
available again from Stark House in their fine Black Gat Books line. The
narrator/protagonist is Marty Bond, a disgraced former cop who’s been reduced
to working as the house detective in a sleazy hot-sheet hotel in New York City.
He’s battling health problems, too, and discovers that he may have cancer. You’d
think we would feel a little sorry for a sad sack like that, but Lacy makes it
difficult to like Marty: he’s a drunk, a racist, was corrupt when he was a cop
and is still on the shady side, and he treats everybody like crap.

But then his stepson, who’s an auxiliary cop and wants to work his way up to
being the real thing, comes to see Marty and tells him about a big case he’s
stumbled on. Marty thinks the kid is nuts for wanting to poke his nose into
something that’s none of his business and tells him so. But then the kid gets
beaten up and nearly killed, and Marty is mad enough about that he decides to
look into the case himself, maybe get vengeance for what happened to his
stepson and crack one last big case before the cancer in his gut kills him.

As you probably can tell, this novel borders on nasty at times (but in a good
way), and unlikable though he is, you really want Marty Bond to get to the
bottom of things and deliver justice to the bad guys. Now, if you’ve read more
than a dozen mystery novels in your life, you’ll see all the big twists in the
plot coming from far, far away, but that doesn’t really matter all that much.
Lacy kept me flipping the pages through the sheer raw power of the prose and
the great character of Marty Bond. I thoroughly enjoyed THE MEN FROM THE BOYS.
Lacy takes us on a walk down some ugly streets and does a fine job of it.

Tuesday, February 20, 2018

Rex Allen may have been Republic Pictures' second-string singing cowboy behind Roy Rogers in the early Fifties, but I've always enjoyed his movies. The production values were always top-notch as well. Take COLORADO SUNDOWN, a 1952 entry that I've just watched. The director is William Witney, the special effects are by the Lydecker brothers, and there are plenty of great stunts choreographed by stunt coordinator Fred Graham, who also plays one of the bad guys. The movie gets off to a fast start, too, with a musical number, a runaway stage coach, and a murder in the first ten minutes.The screenplay by Eric Taylor and William Lively is fairly complicated, involving a villainous brother and sister who inherit a ranch and plan to strip it of its timber, causing erosion and flooding that will ruin the other ranchers in the valley. Their scheme goes awry when a couple of unexpected other heirs show up, one of them none other than Slim Pickens, who was usually Rex Allen's sidekick. Rex has come along with his buddy Slim, of course, to make sure that no one takes advantage of him. It doesn't take Rex long to figure out that something crooked is going on, and before you know it, ridin' and shootin' abound, mixed in with at least three brutal fistfights (a Witney trademark) and a flash flood.Slim Pickens is always fun to watch, the fine character actress Louise Beavers does what she can with a stereotypical role as a maid, and Allen is very likable, as well as an excellent rider and athlete. He was a good singer, too, although not as good as Roy. In fact, when I was a little kid I saw him perform at the Fat Stock Show rodeo in Fort Worth, and I've never forgotten it. (I saw Roy and Dale at the same rodeo a different year. No wonder I grew up to write cowboy stories.)If you've never seen a Rex Allen movie, you should check out COLORADO SUNDOWN. It's a well-written, well-directed, well-made B-Western, not in the top rank of the genre but certainly worth watching.

Monday, February 19, 2018

Three stories from ROCKET'S RED GLARE, the science fiction anthology I edited and published last year, have been selected to be reprinted in the next volume of THE YEAR'S BEST MILITARY AND ADVENTURE SF, edited by David Afsharirad and published by Baen Books. The stories are "Orphans of Aries" by Brad R. Torgersen, "A Hamal in Hollywood" by Martin L. Shoemaker, and "A Man They Didn't Know" by David Hardy. I'm really excited that these fine stories are being honored this way and can't wait to see them appear in the anthology. Makes me feel proud to be an editor.

Sunday, February 18, 2018

ALL DETECTIVE MAGAZINE wasn't all that successful for Dell, running less than three years, but it had some good covers, like this one by Rafael DeSoto, and some fine authors, including in this issue Erle Stanley Gardner, Frederick C. Painton, Dwight V. Babcock, Edward P. Norris, and Hapsburg Liebe. I love that redheaded babe's expression.

Saturday, February 17, 2018

I can't tell if this hombre's hat got shot off or just fell off, so I can't say for sure if it's an Injury to a Hat cover. But I can tell you that the cover is by Robert Gibson Jones, this issue was edited by Ray Palmer, and the authors who have stories inside include Dwight V. Swain, "Alexander Blade", Chester S. Geier, Robert Moore Williams, Paul W. Fairman, William P. McGivern, H.B. Livingston (who was really Berkeley Livingston), and Lester Barclay (who was also Berkeley Livingston). In other words, the usual suspects for a Ziff-Davis pulp. But it's a pretty entertaining group of usual suspects.

Friday, February 16, 2018

I’ve mentioned before that I like to read books about
writers. Here’s one that’s a little bit different. OH, FOR THE LIFE OF AN
AUTHOR’S WIFE is by Elizabeth Charlier Brown, Fredric Brown’s second wife who
was married to him from 1948 until his death in 1972, during the most successful part of his
career.

Elizabeth, or Bethie, as Fred called her, wrote this book in 1958, but it’s
gone unpublished until now. It’s a fine memoir. Elizabeth Brown wrote and sold
a few stories to the love pulps in the early Fifties, so she wasn’t exactly an
amateur writer, but this book does have a charmingly unpolished air about it,
more like you’re sitting with her and she’s telling you the stories in person.
She writes quite a bit about the domestic side of the life she shared with
Fredric Brown, the moving from state to state (Fred Brown was a very restless
person and never liked to stay in one place for too long), the houses where
they lived, the friends they made, the parties they attended, etc. But for those
of us more interested in the writing side of things, she also goes into detail
about what Fred was working on when, how some of the books came about, how his
famous habit of taking long bus trips to work out his plots originated, even
how much money he was paid for his books and stories. I’m often surprised by
how little money was made by writers I’ve thought of as having long, successful
careers. The Browns, for example, sometimes had to borrow money just to pay bills.

There are also numerous passages about other writers the Browns met and
befriended, including a mention of Sam Merwin Jr., my old mentor from the MSMM
days. It’s all fascinating stuff, and I had a hard time putting the book down
because it seemed like there was always another nugget about the world of
mystery and science fiction publishing in the 1950s just waiting to be
discovered in its pages.

I’ll admit, I’m woefully under-read when it comes to Fredric Brown. I’ve read
two or three novels and a handful of his short stories, but I’ve enjoyed them
all and really need to read more by him. This volume may prompt me to do just
that. I really enjoyed it, and if you’re a Fredric Brown fan or just someone
who likes reading about authors, I give it a high recommendation.

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

(This post originally appeared in somewhat different form on September 1, 2010.)

From what I can tell, this is a Canadian/German TV
mini-series released as a feature film on DVD. It’s an old-fashioned disaster
movie, complete with brilliant but impossibly good-looking scientist heroes,
cute kids, grumpy but heroic old-timers, clueless politicians and military
officers, and no real villains other than a capricious universe. In this case,
the trouble starts when during a meteor shower, a chunk of a brown dwarf star
slams into the Moon and imbeds itself deep beneath the lunar surface. The impact,
plus the added weight of the incredibly dense dead star, throws the moon into a
crazy orbit that makes gravity go crazy on Earth. Even worse, the Moon’s orbit
is going to deteriorate to the point that it will eventually crash into Earth
itself, shattering the planet.

I’m no scientist, but most of the scientific
explanations in this movie sound pretty sketchy and the actors rush through
them as if the director doesn’t want the audience thinking too much about them.
To be honest, though, nobody watches stuff like this for the science. We watch
for soap opera and stalwart heroics, both of which are in abundant supply in
IMPACT. David James Elliott is the strong-jawed scientist hero, playing the
role like something out of a Doc Smith novel, and Natasha Henstridge is the
most gorgeous brainiac since Denise Richards in that James Bond movie,
whichever one it was. James Cromwell is the father-in-law of Elliott’s
character, Steven Culp is the President, and the rest of the cast consists of
actors I’ve never heard of, although they may be well-known in Canada and
Germany. Everybody is very earnest, which is understandable when the Moon is
going to crash into the Earth in a month.

Despite my borderline snarkiness and the predictability of the script, IMPACT
actually is pretty entertaining and manages to generate considerable suspense
at times. I’m not suggesting you rush right out to pick up a copy, but watching
it is an okay way to spend a couple of evenings or a long afternoon when you
don’t have anything better to do.

I enjoyed David
Hardy’s CODE OF THE LEGION so much I went ahead and read his other French
Foreign Legion yarn, OUTLAWS OF THE LEGION, and I think I liked it even more.
This one finds a group of Legionaires, including a Texas gunfighter (shades of
El Borak!), leaving their post and raiding a sheikh’s stronghold to rescue a
beautiful dancing girl and avenge a friend’s death. As always, Hardy does a
fine job with the setting and the history and packs plenty of gritty action into the tale he’s telling. This is pure pulp in the best way, with echoes not only
of Theodore Roscoe and Georges Surdez but also Robert E. Howard and Talbot
Mundy. I hope Hardy keeps writing these, because they’re some of the best
stories I’ve read recently. Highly recommended.

Sunday, February 11, 2018

Have you ever been watching DOWNTON ABBEY and said to yourself, "Y'know, this is a pretty good show, but what it really needs is giant robots that can turn into other stuff fighting each other"?Because that's kind of what you get in TRANSFORMERS: THE LAST KNIGHT, at least part of the time. Some of the film is set on an English country estate, complete with big, castle-like house, and Jim Carter, who played Carson the butler on DOWNTON ABBEY, plays another butler in this one, only he's a Transformer. And if you think that's kind of weird, hearing Carson's voice coming out of a robot, you'd be right. Elsewhere, Anthony Hopkins is the nobleman Carter's character works for, Mark Wahlberg and Josh Duhamel are our stalwart heroes helping the Transformers fight the evil Decepticons, and a whole crew of veteran voice actors are behind all the computer-generated robots.The plot, you ask? Well, it fills in some of the Transformers' back-story and how they came to earth, which involves King Arthur and Merlin (no, I'm not making this up), and a secret weapon they create and give to Merlin which has been hidden for centuries, until it becomes the only thing that can prevent the Transformers' home planet of Cybertron from crashing into Earth. And Earth holds another secret that effectively sets up the next movie in the series, which I'm sure we'll watch, too, since we've seen all the others. Sure, the Transformers movies are big and loud and silly, but a few times in every one of them, they manage to create the sort of epic feeling that I enjoy. And to be honest, I'm still enough of a 12-year-old boy at heart that giant robots whaling the tar out of each other still seems like fun.I thought about doing this post as part of the Overlooked Movies series, since I didn't know this movie had even been made, let alone was available on DVD, until I happened to come across it, but it seemed too recent and probably was too successful for that. So if I'm still doing the blog in a few years and the Overlooked Movies series is still going on, I'll do a repost of it when I'm stuck for anything else.

A Valentine's Day-related pulp cover by H.J. Ward. I don't know much at all about BEDTIME STORIES except that it looks pretty risque for the era and that Robert Leslie Bellem wrote for it, including a story in this issue. The names of the other authors mean absolutely nothing to me.

Saturday, February 10, 2018

With Valentine's Day coming up next week, it seemed like a good time to run a RANCH ROMANCES cover . . . because nothing says romance like a gun battle. I don't like RANCH ROMANCES from the Thirties as well as I do the issues from the Forties and Fifties, but it still had some good covers and fine authors writing for it. In this issue, there are stories by Stephen Payne, William Freeman Hough, Clee Woods, Cliff Walters, and Elsa Barker, all regulars in RANCH ROMANCES.

Friday, February 09, 2018

I imagine many of you are long-time fans of Donald E.
Westlake’s Parker novels, written under the Richard Stark pseudonym. I’ve only
read about half the series but read one often enough that I plan to get around
to all of them eventually. I just read one I’d never read before, THE BLACK ICE
SCORE, published as a paperback original by Gold Medal in 1968 (the edition I read).

In this one, Parker and his girlfriend Claire are in New York on a shopping
trip when three men break into their hotel room and try to warn Parker off
from a job they seem to believe he’s taken. This is not the way to get on
Parker’s good side, of course. Bad guys never seem to learn: don’t go after Doc
Savage because you think he’s going to interfere with your plans. That holds
true for Parker, too.

More guys show up later and turn out to be the ones the first group was worried
about. They’re from the African nation of Dhaba (to quote Woody Allen’s WHAT
UP, TIGER LILY, a fictional but real-sounding country) and they want Parker to
teach them how to steal a bunch of diamonds that the country’s strongman dictator
has smuggled into New York because he’s planning on abandoning the country.
This bunch wants their guy to replace the soon-to-be-absconding dictator. The
other bunch supports a rival strongman. Parker is just intrigued enough to take
on the job of teaching how to pull off a diamond heist. But he’s not going to
take part in the actual robbery.

How do you think that turns out?

Things always go wrong in these books, and THE BLACK ICE SCORE is no exception.
Lots of stuff happens, and Parker deals with it in his usual badass manner.

To get a minor complaint out of the way, the fictional nation and the rival
groups battling over who’s going to rule it give this plot a bit of a
melodramatic feeling. It strikes me as very Sixties TV, as if Parker wandered
into an episode of MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE or THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E. This sort of takes
away from the air of hardboiled realism I’m used to in this series.

However, the writing is so good, so
terse with not a word wasted, that THE BLACK ICE SCORE is a sheer joy to read
anyway. Which leads me to another point: at 144 pages of average size type,
plus the occasional blank page between chapters, I’d be surprised if this book
is much more than 50,000 words. It might not even be quite that long. Most of
today’s thrillers, if they had the exact same set-up, would be twice that long,
with half a dozen plot detours and an extensive back-story on every character.
It’s true that we don’t know much about some of the characters in this book . .
. but we know enough.

Overall, I wouldn’t put THE BLACK ICE SCORE in the top rank of Parker (or
Westlake) novels, but it’s still very good and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Enough
so that I probably won’t wait as long to read another one.

Thursday, February 08, 2018

I already knew that Richard Prosch is a fine Western
writer. Turns out he’s pretty darned good with contemporary crime fiction, too.
SPALDING’S GROOVE is a collection of two short stories and the intro to a
series that continues in a later novel. The title story finds ex-cop Dan
Spalding running a vintage record store that he inherited from his late
brother. It’s located in Ozark Lake, a town with a big tourist industry that
seems to be based on Branson, Missouri. The former child star of a popular TV
show from the Eighties brings in several boxes of old records to sell, and that’s
the start of a yarn that involves gangs, Russians, tragedy, and a dangerous
shootout. Dan Spalding is an excellent character, just hardboiled enough, with
his cop instincts still intact, to know when trouble’s about to strike. I’m
looking forward to reading his next adventure.

The second story, “Cinderella Makes Good”, is a non-series tale set in Nebraska
during the Eighties that’s a fine example of semi-rural noir involving street
racing, a fatal crash, and vengeance. Prosch’s style is really evocative in
this one. I grew up in Texas in the Sixties, rather than Nebraska in the
Eighties, but some things are universal. Both of these stories are well worth
reading, and if you’re a fan of top-notch crime fiction, I recommend you do so.

Wednesday, February 07, 2018

French Foreign Legion stories were a staple of the
general fiction pulps such as ARGOSY, ADVENTURE, BLUE BOOK, and SHORT STORIES.
But as popular as they were during that era, nobody writes them anymore.

Nobody, that is, except David Hardy. And he does a great job of it. CODE OF THE
LEGION is a novella about the Legionaires assigned to Post 13, an isolated
blockhouse in the Atlas Mountains in Morocco, in the early 20th
Century. They’re surrounded by hostile Berber tribesmen, the supply train that
they’re depending on is ambushed and wiped out, and they’re facing a mysterious
threat inside their own ranks. When the enemy lays siege to the outpost and
begins to pick off the Legionaires one or two at a time, it begins to look as
if none of them will survive.

Hardy does a fine job with the setting and the history, but mainly CODE OF THE
LEGION is an adventure yarn that provides plenty of gritty action and genuine
suspense, not to mention a thrilling conclusion. I really enjoyed this novella
and give it a high recommendation.

Tuesday, February 06, 2018

I murdered my brother with a sculptor's mallet. But it was only a dream. It was a dream I always had. I hated my brother. I was going home to see him now, get it out of my System, and then spend the rest of my life hunting Leda. She was my wife and she belonged to me. All I remember of that searing journey was the sun blazing down, and there, framed in the doorway, were my brother Frank and Leda, my lovely Judas wife. So when they found my brother with his head battered in by a sculptor's mallet, they said I had murdered him. But did I?

77 RUE PARADIS

It began here for Baron, the whole grotesque skein of terror here in this Marseilles street of despair, the street called the Rue Paradis. There was Gorssmann, fat and corrupt, who waited until Baron scraped bottom and then blackmailed him into treason. And Lili, the dark, lovely gamin, who fell in love with Baron--and worked for the man determined to destroy him. Altogether for Frank Baron it was a small hell on the street called Paradise!

This looks like another great double volume Gil Brewer reprint from Stark House, including a fine introduction by David Rachels and an eye-catching cover. I've read one of these novels, FLIGHT TO DARKNESS, and here's part of what I said about it here on the blog back in 2009:

FLIGHT TO DARKNESS is the story of Eric Garth, a
sculptor from an old, fairly well-to-do Florida family who is wounded in the
Korean War. The book opens with him about to be released from the psychiatric
ward of a VA hospital in California. His physical wounds have healed, but he’s
been troubled by a recurring dream in which he murders his brother. Eric has
fallen in love with one of his nurses at the hospital and plans to marry her,
but first they’re going to drive cross-country to return to his family home in
Florida.

I’ll bet you can guess that doesn’t turn out to be a good idea.

Actually, they make it all the way to Alabama before trouble crops up, but when
it does, it lands Eric in a sanitarium, and then his girlfriend disappears, and
then he escapes, and when he does finally make it to Florida . . . well, you
guessed it.

Things get worse.

And looming over the whole thing are Eric’s doubts about his own sanity, so
always in the back of his mind (and the reader’s mind) is the possibility that
he really is crazy, and when he’s framed for murder, well, maybe he wasn’t
framed after all. Before the book is over, Eric can’t fully trust anything or
anybody, including himself.

Murder, madness, swamps, gators, a savagely beautiful woman . . . it doesn’t
get much better than this for noir fans, and the last fifty pages or so are
about as crazed and breakneck as anything you’ll find in the genre. I couldn’t
turn the pages fast enough.

I’ve been a fan of Orson Welles and his movies for many
years, so it’s no surprise that I’d watch ME AND ORSON WELLES, a backstage yarn
from the point of view of a high school student and would-be actor who finagles
his way into a part in Welles’ modern-dress Mercury Theater staging of
Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar” in 1937. It’s a coming-of-age story, too, as the
kid not only learns a lot about the theater and Welles’ eccentricities but also
falls in love with the young woman who helps manage the troupe.

This is an old-fashioned movie, not flashy at all, well-written and very
well-acted. Zac Efron is the kid, Claire Danes is the young woman he falls in
love with, and Christian McKay, an actor I’d never heard of, turns in a
spectacular performance as a young Orson Welles. McKay looks like Welles and
does a good job on the voice, but mostly it’s a matter of capturing the
attitude, the mixture of arrogance and brilliance that allowed Welles to
accomplish the things he did. Also, knowing quite a bit about Welles’ later
career, it was interesting to me to see the origins of some of the projects he
tackled later on. The movie does a fine job of recreating the Thirties
atmosphere, too.

Maybe it’s just because of the subject matter, but I think ME AND ORSON WELLES
is one of the best films I’ve seen this year. Highly recommended.

Sunday, February 04, 2018

I like this cover, although that gunman's hands seem awfully large. The better to threaten the Feds and paw that babe in the red swimsuit, I guess. There are plenty of good writers in this issue of THE FEDS: Steve Fisher, Norman A. Daniels, Arthur J. Burks, Jean Francis Webb, William G. Bogart, Dale Clark, Laurence Donovan, and Edwin V. Burkholder. Not the top rank of pulp authors, maybe, but a good solid B-team.

Saturday, February 03, 2018

A stark, effective cover by Joseph Sokoli graces this issue of LEADING WESTERN, published by Trojan Publishing Corporation, the same outfit responsible for the Spicy pulps a few years earlier. Inside are stories by Laurence Donovan (writing as Larry Dunn) and a slew of house-names such as William Decatur, Paul Hanna, Max Neilson, and Walton Grey. So when it comes to the actual authors of those stories, your guess is as good as mine. It's entirely possible that they're reprints of earlier stories published under different titles and different house-names. Despite all that, I'll bet I would enjoy most of them.

Friday, February 02, 2018

Over the years, Lewis B. Patten has become one of my
favorite Western authors. His books always have a dark tone to them, and that’s
certainly true of THE ODDS AGAINST CIRCLE L, a paperback original published by
Ace in 1966 and later reprinted (the edition I read). In this one, Taggart
Landry has returned to his hometown, which sits in the middle of the vast
Circle L ranch owned by his father. Tag is the black sheep of the family,
having run off a couple of years earlier because he’s jealous of his older brother.
After leaving the ranch, he fell in with the proverbial bad company and got
mixed up in a bank robbery in which a man was killed. Tag didn’t pull the
trigger, but in the eyes of the law, he shares equally in the blame.

Now, after splitting from the gang and drifting for two years, he’s gotten word
that his father is very ill and returns home because of that, even though his brother
hates him and even threatens to kill him. Then, wouldn’t you know it, his
former partners in crime show up and threaten to expose his part in the bank
robbery unless he helps them loot the Circle L. What these murderous outlaws
really have in mind is taking over the ranch, and Tag doesn’t see any way out
of helping them without endangering his still seriously ill father.

Patten was always one to put his characters through hell, and that’s certainly
true in THE ODDS AGAINST CIRCLE L. Tag Landry absorbs a considerable amount of
punishment, both phyical and mental, as the situation gets worse and worse
until he’s finally forced to fight back. Everything comes to a fairly
satisfactory conclusion. Despite the darkness of his plots, Patten’s work
seldom falls into the category of Western noir, so you can count on endings
that aren’t necessarily happy but aren’t tragic, either.

THE ODDS AGAINST CIRCLE L is a little too thin, story-wise, to make it into the
top rank of Patten’s novels, but it is a solid traditional Western that
provides a couple of hours of good reading. I enjoyed it.